Consumers badly want to influence brands, judging by Collaboration & Consensus: Do Consumers Feel Heard?, a study from Ruder Finn, conducted with Full Spectrum Insights.
Of those
polled, 57% desire to engage directly with brands. And they want to be heard by them: 78% wrote an online review, while 56% reached out to a brand and 22% have boycotted a firm that disappointed
them.
Not to worry: 48.7 have done so to provide positive feedback, and only 12.4% engage to say something negative.
Moreover, 55% have a better opinion of a
brand post-engagement, while a mere 8% have a worse one.
But generations differ on how easy it is to reach brands, with Gen Z finding it most difficult: only 38% say
it is easy, versus 53% of millennials and 58% of Gen X.
Overall, 93% want brands to show they listen and that they react to public opinion. They cite these
actions as meaningful:
- Invite feedback and dialogue — 49%
- Support a charitable cause —
38%
- Issue a statement to explain the brand’s position — 38%
- Take a public stance on an issue —
36%
- A public statement or interview by the brand’s leadership — 33%
- Create open forums for opposing view to be impressed
— 32%
- I don’t think that brands should react to public opinion — 7%
How do consumers know if brands are listening? They say:
- The brand took an opposing stance to what I agree with but demonstrated that they heard my point of view — 43%
- The brand didn’t take a chance but
demonstrated that they heard my point of view — 41%
- The brand took a stance that I agree with without explanation —
36%
- The brand took an opposing stance to the one I agree with without explanation — 19%
Ruder Finn, collaborating with Full Spectrum
Insights and using a Pollfish sample, surveyed 1,000 U.S. consumers
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